borosilicate colored sheet glass?
I have been make my own sheet by cutting and flat out borosilicate tubing I have but just to make one little sheet I use for my work take one hour to make. Do anyone know if you can buy borosilicate colored sheet glass?
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There is some information on this vendors page, it's called boro float glass.
http://www.grayglass.net/glass.cfm/L...tid/3/conid/79 |
I've never heard of colored sheet unless it's dichro.
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Good point Dave, I hadn't read it all the way through. It doesn't sound easy to find. I don't suppose it would have much use outside of manufacturing? What are you making, Geoffery?
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I make all kinds of stuff. The reason I wanted to try it was I got a laser printer and the iron oxide printer ink and decal printer paper to print on flat glass. I had had success using Bullseye 90coe and wanted to try it with boro. I had problems with the decals sticking to the tin side. I gave up on getting boro to work. Later I heard about burning the tin side off but never got back to it. I also thought it would be easier to apply designed with a stringer, drawing with a stringer, on flat glass rather on a bubble or maria. Lil bit attention deficit so I never got back to it after I found out about burning the tin off. :)
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This is an example of printing on the Bullseye glass. https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/201...7f73df9a94.png
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Pro |
Thanks for the info. I've seen decal work, I always thought it was applied to tubes or formed work. That looks much easier.
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I once had this brilliant idea to make a glass candy dish out of boro sheet glass. You know, the kind of idea you get after you've taken one class and don't really know anything... I even drew a cross-section diagram. The owner of the studio said that what I wanted to do was really a fusing application, but I knew nothing about fusing. I bought a sheet of boro float... I couldn't cut it. I went to the glass shop in town; the guy at the counter had never heard of boro glass and wanted $10 per cut. I went to the tile place next door, the woman laughed at the guy at the glass shop and said he was an idiot, but she couldn't help me cut it either. I finally found someone to cut it. They couldn't cut the pieces straight because boro is hard to cut with regular tools. I heated all of the pieces in the kiln to get them up to at least 1060 before I started hitting them with the flame, but still, all of the pieces cracked.
There's a lot more to the story of the candy dish that wasn't, but my recommendation on boro float glass is don't. It's not worth the expense or the effort, and Bullseye exists. |
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